JANET PEERY
How Beautiful Thy Feet With Shoes
After waking from a troubled dream that at the final
hour his mind abandoned him to wander in an unknown land, the old man
took stock. He was certain who he was—Mack Spain at ninety, give
or take—and where—his room for over half a century, its window
giving onto what amounted to a grassland outpost where he’d landed
in the dust storms and had never meant to stay. The question of when
was easy. All his life he’d tracked the seasons, his memory an
almanac. A Sunday in the month of June, the last year of the seventh
decade, the early morning moon a waxing crescent. His frame, he calculated,
was rusted past repair, but his faculties were fine. In the dream he
heard no voices. He could tell the living from the dead. So far the dead
had kept their distance. It was unsettled business with the living that
gnawed at him.
At noon he expected the arrival of the woman who
had been, in what now seemed another life, his daughter. After a long
estrangement—he blamed hard times, his faulty fathering, her pride—she
traveled every Sunday the hundred miles that separated them, bringing
groceries—bread, tinned milk, a bag of ginger snaps he rationed
to make it last the week. In fair return he stood by while she assayed
his decline, suffered her devotion while she daughtered past the silence
on his part that kept from her the fact that she was not his daughter
but his niece.
Her name was Maxine but she was called Mackie, as
if a shared nickname could shield her from his brother’s violence
in her begetting, or from his own. Just home to Joplin from the Meuse-Argonne,
hearing a woman’s screams in the winter woods where he was tracking
a buck, Mack had mistaken Hardy for a stranger. Into the moonlit darkness
he shouted, “Whoa up!” He aimed the barrel high, meaning
to fire a warning shot to scare off the attacker. When he clambered up
the ridge he learned he’d shot his brother in the back. Wracked
with horror, wanting to make right, he sought out the girl, married her
to give the coming child a name. When he found a spread of ranch land
at a tolerable price, he moved them out to Oklahoma.
His hope had been to found at Salt Camp the orphan’s
vision of the paradise of kin, a plot of well-loved ground, a crowded,
ample table and a happy life for generations, love abundant, room enough
for all. He’d failed at this so grandly that it stunned him still,
but at last he’d come to understand his sin of sins. Because he
wanted to be good, he asked the same of others, held them to a light
they couldn’t possibly reflect, and when they let him down he trained
on them the full force of his disappointment with himself.
Rising this June morning, he made up his mind to
talk her into driving him out to look at the place he had stayed away
from for forty years. At this late date he didn’t plan to tell
her their relation—what purpose would the truth serve if his was
the only mind it eased?—but he had sensed in her a kindred affliction.
She moved from town to town, wandering the desert like the Israelites,
failing to take root, as if trying to outrun her failures. He wanted
to warn her away from dwelling in the wasteland of remorse, whether she
burned up the road to do so or stayed put.
Times before, when he suggested the trip, she came
up with excuses. It would eat up the day and she had work to do. There
was nothing left to see but go-back land and anyway his eyesight was
so bad he couldn’t tell what he’d be looking at. His boots
were an embarrassment. He wondered if her shilly-shally rose from qualms
that going back might rattle loose a failing of her own.
Hers too was one of clouding the truth. Just before
the Second War she came back with a boy of three or four, saying she’d
taken him to raise. The practice was common in Depression years—stray
people and loose-ended children had been everywhere. Schooled in keeping
his own counsel, in the exacting counterweights of shame and pride, he
had let her story stand, no matter that the child was Hardy, spit and
image.
Whatever her reasons, it galled him that her counts
against him weren’t far wrong. He could no longer see to drive—his
pick-up rusted in the machine shed—and his toes, for want of tending,
had crabbed over on themselves, the nails grown antler-yellow, hard as
horn. He had tried every tool, the ordinary mill bastard file, the polling
shears, the pig tooth nippers, but he couldn’t get the angle right,
couldn’t bend right, couldn’t see. His hands were stiff as
plankwood, all drawing tendons and swelling joints. His feet were worse.
No boot or shoe would fit and so for months he’d shuffled around
in carpet slippers, but in honor of the day’s errand he worked
to rig a pair of wingtips bought in higher times by cutting out the toe
box. If he looked like a funny-papers bum for his trouble, at least he
would be able to walk the land, get her up onto the rise and feel that
old lost living ground still swelling under him.
By the time her El Camino pulled into the yard,
he had passed muster in the kitchen mirror. His thready hair was water-spruced
and furrowed with comb tracks, the stubbled crosshatch of his chin free
of tobacco juice. He waited on the lean-to porch, busying himself with
inspecting a tenpenny nail worked out of the baluster.
A small, spare woman nearing sixty, she appeared,
in the week since he had seen her, to have made herself over. Instead
of the shapeless house-dress he’d come to expect, she wore a pair
of Levi’s, a crisp snap-buttoned shirt with a Western yoke, a Spanish
belt. The hammered conchos glittered in the morning light. New earrings,
some kind of crystal that reminded him of the salt crust at the Rock
Saline, dangled from her earlobes. Her hair, once worn in a knot, was
loosely gathered with a leather ornament. He’d never known her
to be vain—she hadn’t been a beauty but she had a pretty,
bright-eyed face with color quick to rise—but the changes became
her and from her blush he saw that she was pleased with them herself.
It struck him that he wasn’t the only one who had a mission.
From the seat she pulled out grocery bags, her pocketbook,
a box of Oxydol. “Morning, Dad.”
He cleared his throat, thick with the quid habit
he’d taken up to hurry sundown on long solitary days. “That
it is.”
She squinted against the sun’s glare off the
porch’s tin roof, already ticking with the heat. “How are
you doing?”
He grinned; he’d made the joke before. “Mildewing.”
Dutifully—at least that was unchanged—she
laughed, shading her eyes to take him in.
He essayed a shuffle, a creaky, bone-jarring step
to take her attention from the cuspidor he’d forgotten to hide,
a sludge-filled Mason jar beside his bench, but her quick eye spied it.
He tapped again to shift her notice to his shoes, but he stepped down
wrong, flinched when pain knifed up his ankle. He wondered, not for the
first time, why he took to clowning when he felt the possibility of blame.
She shook her head at the spit jar and then lengthened
her gaze to survey the place, the mounting pile of cans beside the porch—Luck’s,
Dinty Moore, Hormel—the wracked timbers of the far barn, the nearer
barn collapsed into a creature haven overgrown with trumpet vine and
brambles. The windmill, spavined as a burden-broken horse, folded inward
on itself. He readied for reproof. Truth told, for all he’d yearned
for family life, the decades she stayed away had come as a relief. Alone,
he had to bear no judgment but his own for his boar’s nest or the
habits he refused to break. Tobacco, cold canned chili, rumination.
“I brought you something. Look—” she
held a stewpot—“field peas. Your favorite.”
They weren’t. At some point he must have made
over them. Her efforts to please him often pained him. If he was guilty
of believing he could mend the worn-out world with God and spit and baling
wire, she behaved as though it could be nursed to health with false cheer
and hot food. When she thrust the pot into his hands he was relieved
of the awkward chance of an embrace.
In a fit of dithering she took back the pot. “Oh,
never mind. I’ll set these on.”
He followed her across the porch, propping the screen
door for her with his cut-down shoe and showing it to advantage. “Maybe
you hadn’t ought to settle in so fast.”
A barn cat with her ears laid back was what she called
to mind. Not spooked enough to run, but watchful. She thought he was
either telling her to go away or passing judgement on her gypsy ways. “In
case we go somewhere, I mean.”
If her fault-finding grated, it was her fear of him
that nerved him up. Maybe she was wary by nature and maybe he was to
blame. He had favored her sister Etta, born two years later. He didn’t
know if it was the eldest’s affliction—her foot curled slightly
inward, causing her to limp—that caused his wife to watch for slights,
but he believed her vigilance set further hindrance to his dealings with
his brother’s child. Even now they weren’t able to talk straight,
couldn’t find a way to meet each other in the middle.
He made a sheaf of the papers on the table, his budget,
advertising flyers for things he didn’t want or need. “Not
too big a mess to clean up in here this week.”
“Not bad at all.” Her voice was bright,
a signal of her willingness to try again. She set the pot on the burner,
lighted the flame, and then went to the pantry. She returned with a torn
sack of cornmeal.
He didn’t like it when she took it on herself
to tidy up, especially when it meant a wasted nickel. “I might
have use for that.”
“Weevils got into it.” She dropped the
cornmeal bag into the trash bin.
He started to protest but then he decided to pick
his battles. “Say,” he began, thinking that a little saddle
soap about her wardrobe might ease the way for her to notice his and
set them on their way, “is that the latest style?”
“Oh, I just threw it on.” She fiddled
with her shirt cuffs, rolled up her sleeves. The dungarees were spanking-new,
still stiff.
Aggravated that he was shambling around his topic
when he ought to outright state it, he pulled out a kitchen chair but
before he could sit down and lay out his plan, he was seized by the urge
to get away.
In his prime he could have stumped out to the fields,
stayed gone all day and come back empty-minded, but his range had narrowed
to the mailbox on the road. “Going to the box. Might be the check’s
here.”
“Nothing’s come. I looked. Besides, it’s
Sunday.”
To leaven their stand-off, he gave her a wily look. “It’s
the government. You don’t know what they’ll do.”
Her earrings jittered, seemed to throw off sparks. “You
can’t take someone else’s word?”
He pretended not to hear, and he headed down the
steps and across the yard, his spine held straight, the posture Etta
had once called his ‘riding back.’ When he believed she was
no longer watching, he slowed to save his feet. Even the softest leather
rubbed. The split toe box threw off his gait. The ground was hard, the
going slow, giving him time to mull again the question that had vexed
him all his life—how could it be that things he meant to do so
right could end up so wrong?
In his dogged hunt for the first wrong turning, starting
with his boyhood in the Baptist Home for Boys, his mind took him past
youth, past early manhood, past French forest and Missouri woods to fix
on an April day in his middle years at Salt Camp.
That morning too he had awakened at first light,
just as the Dominecker rooster muttered and hens grudged awake. He went
to stand on the back steps in union suit, sock feet. A faint warm breeze,
stars pot-iron gray, the moon an aging quarter in the west. East, a spill
of crimson at the cloud line. Red sky at morning. He let his spirits
rise.
For years the droughty earth had blown, fine farms
and ranches gone to ruin. Somehow his escaped the damage. He credited
his faith. He trusted heaven to provide and heaven had repaid him. If
the promise of sunrise meant anything, the coming thunderstorm would
be a drencher, pastures soaked to pan, the creek high, froth boiling
in the eddies. His hayfield was nearing bloom; with rain, the field would
be a sea of blue, the winter wheat a billow. Let Noah’s flood come,
yes, he thought, for once not caring that he borrowed God’s own
voice: Let there be rain.
Upstairs, his family slept in bedsteads of his own
carpentry, under the gabled roof of his own shoring. Billie with her
face unpinched, too early in the season for hay fever to clot her breathing,
in sleep as not in waking satisfied. Mackie at fourteen a nerve-strung
sleeper, legs atwitch. Contrary Etta, at twelve in her last year to be
a child, curled for once into a compact stillness, his spitfire. He counted
his blessings, sending up a grateful word.
He went inside to take his bib-alls from the peg,
stepped in and hoisted up. Stretching, he felt his neck pop, his backbone
righting itself like a signal deep within. He eased on his boots and
started for the barn.
This is the church and this is the steeple—always
the Sunday school rhyme as he heaved open the great doors. He loved the
deep-bayed cow barn, the place cathedral-like as dawn broke through,
the smells of neatsfoot oil and polished tack, feather dander, hay dust
from the winter-cure. He loved the stamp and shuffle of his shorthorn
milchers, the beasts ungainly, yawing on their hooves, the chuff of hide
against the hand-hewn rails, the heft of swollen udders. He forked silage
into the manger and the cows moved in, heads lowered, as if coming forward
at an altar call. He set the stanchions and settled in to milk.
In church, he couldn’t pray. The sanctuary
was too close with the smells of must and sizing, a sour whiff of snuff,
the woman’s monthly smell. Too human and too carnal, reminding
him of flesh. A shaft of sunlight streaming through the Gethsemane window
might cast a patch of fire across the stuff of his black trousers, turn
them redder than mercurochrome, and the heat might cause him to look
up into the choir loft for a certain pigeon-y soprano. His daydreams
would inflame him and he’d have to rest the hymnal on his lap.
To clear his mind, he sent it to the fields, slew panic grass and shattercane,
thwacking at the seed heads with a scythe until more righteous thoughts
returned.
In the barn, alone but for the cows, hot daydreams
didn’t plague him. Instead, something calm and holy seemed called
out of him and he felt clean as a boy, light in his bones. Here, he was
moved to pray his constant prayer, Thank you, I am sorry. To
sing hymns in his cracked morning voice, starting low, more murmur than
music. By the time the pail was full his dark thoughts would be washed
away.
“Angels to beckon me,” he sang against
the red whorls of a shorthorn’s flank, hearing the reach of his
warming tenor to the rafters. “Darkness be o’er me, my rest
a stone.” Outside the half-door, low clouds scudded whitely by,
lamb-like and fleet.
After church, beside the stand of stunted creek
willows in what was called the pasturage, the congregation lingered,
speculating. A passable crop if prices held. If it didn’t blow
to China. If jackrabbits didn’t get it. If it would rain. The little
children chased around the circle of parked automobiles while the BYF
youth played a kissing game forbidden from the pulpit. Off behind the
privy he’d found them, his lame girl and the pastor’s boy,
locked in an embrace. Her look was rapturous and stupid, spellbound.
Before he knew what he was doing, he’d snatched up a willow switch.
The boy fled but she stood, head bowed, taking his
blows. She wouldn’t cry, refused to, stood there with a saintly
look on her small features. It wasn’t noise she made that drew
the others, but his own, a stream of bellowed hellfire that he hadn’t
known was in him. All he knew was that the blood had risen to his throat,
and he was shouting, bringing down the switch against her legs. A group
of deacons stopped him. “Mack, let go. She’s just a little
girl. She meant no harm.”
Back home in the lull of afternoon he stretched out
on the front room rug to nap. The dinner hour had passed in stony silence.
Troubled by what he’d done at the pasturage, he had a hard time
dozing, but when he did at last he slept too hard, too long, woke to
a hot and airless house, to the heartsunk understanding that he’d
lit into her in penance for his own unruly lusts.
Bleared with sleep, he went to the window. Outside,
a long low cloud glowed red. Strange light seemed to overtake his wife
as she stood in the chicken yard. Out near the currant bushes Mackie
sat among the flock of Dutch Everydays. He looked for Etta, taking in
the barn, the silo, her rope swing, but she was nowhere to be seen. Sand
gusted against the window glass, but even then he let himself believe
the cloud portended rain.
He exulted at the first huge drops, the shudder of
unstable air, heat-charged, then frigid. Then the rain ceased and grit
needled at his face. Forearm shielding his eyes, he waited for the spate
to pass, but in the clearing air the cloud came on. A blistering wind,
a seethe of sand and haystraw glinting in the sifting dirt, tattered
paper scraps white as the cattle egrets that flew before the dark red
roller cloud.
He called for Etta, but the wind tore the breath
from his mouth. At last in the blowing dust he caught a glimpse of her
on the roof of the washing shed, saw Mackie there beneath the eaves.
Instantly he knew what Etta had done, her trick forbidden as the kissing
game; she’d sewn her feet together in a spectacle she called The
Hindu Needle. She sprawled face down, half-on, half-off the roof, her
sister tugging at her bound feet. He broke into a run and closed the
distance. His heart broke when she whimpered, “Don’t hit
me!”
Mackie yanked and Etta dropped, her weight pitching
the two girls backward. He ran to pick them up, carried Etta through
dirt already drifting, the other coming on behind.
When he set the child inside the door, she crumpled. “It’s
all right,” he told her, “I won’t hit you.”
Billie lit the lamp, took in the scene, went for
the rugbeater. He had threatened that if he caught her again, there’d
be a reckoning.
“Let me take her in the front room.” There,
away from the others, he could lighten his hand.
Billie hardened her eyes. A renegade idea coursed
through his mind, Refuse. But his wife had snipped the thread,
pulled up the girl and turned her around.
The lamp flickered, dimmed, the globe already filmed
with dust. He loved her then more than he ever had, his stormy girl,
her face defiant, and he’d known, even as he raised the rug beater,
that he would lose her, if not this day, then soon. He wanted to say
something about Abraham and Isaac, about sacrifice, to liken her wrong
to her sister’s in the pasturage. He wanted to teach a lesson that
just then he couldn’t put words to, except to know the lesson would
be his.
His first blow was a glancing one, but Etta wailed.
The others watched him, eyes like judges. Wind lashed at the weatherboard.
Again and again he brought down the rope-webbed beater,
brought it down until he was spent with loathing, sick with the knowledge
he was bringing down his hand on all of them except the one he struck.
He had reached the lane end to open the mailbox he
knew was empty. Walking, he had willed a letter to appear, a check, a
flyer or a handbill, anything to earn the need for the errand, but there
was nothing.
On the way back to the house he took measure of his
gumption, found he still wanted to see Salt Camp, more now than before.
He would tell her he was sorry for the way he treated her. He would get
her to remember better days, show her how he tried. Remind her of the
kiddie wagon he’d pulled her around in. The goat they’d bottle-fed.
A hutch he’d built beneath the cedars where she played café,
serving the rabbits lettuce leaves on doll house plates. Somewhere in
a bureau drawer there was a tintype of her at two, her hair still baby-fluff.
He had stood for the photographer in the front yard of the Salt Camp
house beside a trellis of Cherokee roses while she perched on his shoulders,
her legs around his neck, her dimpled hands pressed into his eyes, wild
delight in hers. He would find the picture, tuck it in his shirt pocket,
show it to her once they got there, proof. And then he would tell her
that he loved her, letting the words he had found himself unable to say—not
to her or to her sister, not to anyone—stand for every other lesson
he would like to leave behind. If they left soon, they could be back
before the sun went down.
In the kitchen, tin cans were stowed in grocery bags
and set by the back door. She had run sudsy water in the sink. The smell
of vinegar and Bon Ami stung his eyes. On the stove the field peas simmered.
He rubbed his hands in a show of heartiness, hoping
to right the day. “Smells good in here.” Suddenly he meant
it. The earthy, fragrant steam had chased away the staleness, and with
the window open the room felt light, the day seemed new. He took a chair
at the table, easing off his feet and trying not to groan.
“Why, it’s just peas.”
“But what’s that you put in for seasoning?”
“Salt and pepper. Ham. A little blackstrap
if I’m feeling venturesome.”
“Venturesome,” he repeated. An inroad.
But before he could follow through she clamped the pot lid on the peas.
“I have something to tell you.” She hooked
a strand of hair behind her ear, then grabbed the broom to sweep under
the table, the strokes brisk and determined.
His preoccupation with confession braced him for
hers. “You planning to tell me what the something is?” His
voice sounded gruffer than he wanted it to, and so he winked.
“I’m going by a different name.”
He tried to remember the last time he called her
by the name they shared. What had he called her?
Whisk went the straw broom. “Maxine
is what I go by over there.”
A phrase came to him from eighth grade Latin: Nomen
est omen, but he couldn’t puzzle out its meaning. To show
her he would take her decision at face value, he said, “Well,
that’s near enough I won’t forget it, and it’s your
given name, besides.”
“It’s what they know me by. In case you
ever had to call, or needed to find me. . .” Her voice trailed
off. The shadow of her sister hovered. There had been bad blood between
the girls; his favoring played a part. He had tried to track Etta, but
he found no trace of her or of the hired boy who’d taken off to
fetch her. He blamed himself for that as well.
He suspected the news about her name was just the
first run at the wall. If she finally came out with the truth about her
son, he would do her the honor of not asking questions. Her wrongs would
dovetail into his and he could speak his piece.
She swept dirt into the dustpan, and then propped
the broom beside the door, looking around for the next chore. She picked
up a sponge and stooped to work at a sticky spot on the linoleum.
Winding sideways toward his ends—Salt Camp
was on the way to the panhandle town where she moved a few weeks before—he
asked, “Aiming to settle over there?”
She took his question as judgment, he could tell
by the cant of her head, her hooded gaze, trying to meet his but failing. “I
might just.” She appeared to want to say more, but the sponge just
then needed wringing.
He got to his feet, steadying himself with a hand
on the table. If he waited for her to out with her confession, he would
have to wait all day. If she planned to tell him, she could do that just
as well when they were in the car. He thought of Salt Camp in the spring,
the pastures green with timothy, and he saw them flying down the highway,
his 3X Stetson squared, the wind against his sleeve.
“Look here, I want us to go over home.”
“To Salt Camp?” She opened the oven door
to peer inside. “Dad, what are you roasting in here? Ox?”
“If it’s my shoes . . .”
She faced him, no downward glance, no hem-haw. “It’s
your feet. You had to creep out to the mailbox. Hobble was more like
it. I’ll take you over there, but first you’ll have to fix
your feet.”
“They’re fine. They reach the ground.”
No smile for his old joke, she turned back to consider
the blackened oven. “How about next Sunday? That way we can plan
it.”
He wanted to walk back down the lane, take himself
away to collect his thoughts and work himself back up, but he’d
already done that. Why did it have to be so hard to get something across? “Now,
today.”
“All right.” She shut the oven door. “But
first let’s have a look.”
“No horsetrading. My feet are fine. Let’s
just get going. Day’s a’wasting.”
She angled out a kitchen chair. “Dad, sit down.”
“I said they’re fine.”
She shrugged, picked up the broom again, intent on
knocking cobwebs from the corners.
He sat, began to work at the knots he’d labored
to tie. By the time his socks were shucked, she had filled the enamel
roaster pan with warm water and Epsom salts. She lowered the pan to the
floor, pushed it nearer his chair. The water wavered, sloshed.
“Soak a good long while. Then you can doctor
up your feet and your boots will fit. And then we’ll see about
going.”
“We’ll see about?”
She pursed her lips, the picture of her mother. “We’ll
go.”
Where it wasn’t yellowed, his skin was milky
blue and scaling, the overgrown nails yellow-gray as polled horn stubs,
his toes clawed, crippled things. Exposed in the patch of sunlight that
stole across the linoleum, the wreckage of his feet shocked him. He eased
them into the water, not to do her bidding but to hide them, and as he
did so something in him seemed to turn against her. Who was she to call
him on his ways? On his broken windmill or his spit jar or his feet?
While she busied herself in the back room, he looked
at a Reader’s Digest. Even the large print version blurred.
Mack Spain who’d once maneuvered wiry and surefooted on the frets
above the stockyards at Baxter Springs, who’d driven cattle up
the Chisholm Trail, who’d taken fire near the Hindenburg Line,
that man’s worth had been spilled out on the ground or dumped into
the trash bin, swept away, and what was left was useless as a pail of
water in a drought.
She returned from the back room where she was changing
the bed sheets to ladle some field peas onto a plate. She set them on
the table with a glass of milk beside which she laid out three ginger
snaps, a child’s meal. “Eat a little something.”
He spooned up some field peas, tasted them. Too hot.
He tried a cookie and before he knew it he had eaten all three and she
had caught him in the act. “Dad, you’ll spoil your appetite.”
“It’s a hard life if you don’t
weaken.” He didn’t know why he’d said this. The phrase
was a Depression saying. What he meant was that age was bad enough, the
narrowing of vision, the hobbling of his senses. She didn’t have
to point it out.
“Keep at it. I’ll go find the clippers.” She
was gone before he could tell her he’d already tried them.
He spooned up some more field peas, tried again to
eat them, but he’d lost his appetite, and somehow this too was
her fault. He started to call after her but he felt a quaver rising in
his throat. He never swore, but he was moved to add a word to tamp the
tremor. “Damn things won’t work.”
She returned with a towel, some LaCross clippers
and a pair of snips, forged steel but black with tarnish, and the hoof
rasp. “Daddy, if you’d soaked them before they’d have
clipped easier.”
She never called him Daddy and it set him off. “I’m
not a child.”
“Then don’t act like one.”
When she was a girl she’d lived to please him.
Anything he did was fine. “You never would have talked to me like
that before.”
Sitting cross-legged on the floor in front of his
chair, she lifted his foot from the water, dried it with a towel. His
skin was waterlogged and soft, his toes had puckered. He drew back. “That
hurts.”
“We haven’t even started.”
A breeze wafted through the open screen door and
with it a rise of ticklishness he willed away. The hoof rasp muttered
across the softened nail, setting his teeth on edge. He said again, he
didn’t know why, “It’s a hard life if you don’t
weaken.”
She smiled gently. “Dad, nobody’s perfect.”
“Isn’t that the truth.” He
was proud of his comeback, one lick closer to the topic. If it didn’t
lead her to the next part of her news, he didn’t know what would.
She went on filing until it was clear the hoof rasp
wouldn’t do the job, its gauge too large. She picked up the clippers. “Just
keep imagining how good you’ll feel when this is done.” Her
eyes were light brown, deep-set in a web of wrinkles. “Just think, ‘How
beautiful thy feet with shoes. . . .’”
For reasons he couldn’t name the verse from
Solomon crossed him wrong. “But not without?”
“Oh, Dad.”
If she didn’t hurry up and get what she’d
come to tell him over with—he wasn’t born yesterday, it was
coming, he’d bet money on it—he was going to kick away the
roaster pan, splash water on the floor and stomp out to the porch, bite
off a big fat plug. She was trying to help, but somehow this made him
want to kick her.
Her breath on his feet was warm, too close. He thought
of the foot-washing service at the Salt Camp church at Easter, and he
wanted to wrest away. One of her earrings cast a rainbow on the water
in the roaster. A deep clip sent a shard pinging against the
cupboard.
“How’s the boy?” She’d shown
him a picture of the grandson he’d never met, a toddler on a plastic
tricycle. For all her own wrong turns and wandering, she’d ended
up with what he’d always wanted. How was that fair?
“Buddy’s fine. Jesse and Marie moved
west of Albuquerque.” She clipped, then clipped again.
He was goading her but he’d gone too far to
stop. “Did Jesse ever straighten out?”
Jesse was her sore spot, the boy—the man, he
guessed—headstrong and lazy. Aimless, no direction whatsoever and
so he fired in any one that came to mind. He came to Mack a few times
in the sixties, a rangy long-hair with a blue bandanna tied around his
forehead, a cheap guitar, a smell of burning stinkweed. Wanted Mack to
show him how to cowboy, but like Hardy he was wound too tight, couldn’t
stand still long enough to learn a pastern from a fetlock, a curb bit
from a hackamore, and Mack had already strung a five-strand fence around
his heart.
“He’s trying.” She kept on clipping.
He had put his own restless energy to use, driven
to work from sun to no-sun. The force that pushed him then to tong and
whang at things under his hand until they amounted to something or else
shattered drove him now, made him want to harry the truth out of her.
He felt in his pocket for his quid pouch, but it was out on the porch
under his bench. He longed for a cheek-load of bitter juice.
“Did he never,” he asked, fixing on the
question he calculated would trip her spring, “want to know his
mother?”
He wasn’t sure what he expected. A flood of
tears, the martyred look she’d given at the pasturage that fueled
his wrath. In truth he’d whaled at her so hard because in her he
saw his own holy do-good notions, and the desire to break her seized
him as fiercely now as it had then. But she looked up at him dry-eyed
and sorrowful, and he understood she saw him the way in his worst judgment
he saw himself, feeble, mean, embittered. She had written off his cruelty
to age.
She had finished with one foot and set to working
on the other, the nail shards falling like so many nutshells. As if she’d
worked it all out in her mind a long time back, she said levelly, collapsing
every board he’d used to build his grudge against her, “I
had him, Dad. He always knew. I’ve done plenty to him, I suppose,
but that one thing I couldn’t.”
“Well,” he said. “Well, hell.”
She didn’t lower her eyes but met his straight. “I
didn’t know what to tell you. I didn’t want to disappoint
you and then it got to be too late and the lie got too big to take back.
I thought you’d. . . .”
“Judge? I’d never.” He looked at
the Mason jar upended in the drainer, immaculate and shining. “I’d
never.”
It wasn’t lost on him that she saw his claim
for the untruth it was but didn’t trouble to dispute it.
She scooped the nail parings into the dustpan. Pushing
up from the floor, she said briskly, radiant with relief, “It’s
done. Shoe up and we’ll go out there. I’d half like to see
the place again.”
She wiped her hands on her Levi’s, looked around
to see if anything else needed doing before they left, her gaze coming
to rest on the ruined wingtips beside the chair where he’d left
them, as if he’d stepped out of them to be taken in the Rapture. “Try
them now, why don’t you?”
The silence drew out long. Into it he could confess
his wrongs, not just his failings but his sins, the truth he’d
kept from her. He could come clean.
She smiled encouragingly, and it occurred to him
she was the one person on earth who would forgive him anything. But something
had shifted outside his power to reckon or foresee, outside the guiding
of his hand. “Maybe another time. It would be dark by the time
we got there.”
“I should be going anyway. Your bed’s
made if you want a nap.” She stowed the cleaning supplies and dumped
the water, dug in her pocketbook for keys.
He wanted to mark what had taken place between them,
but he wasn’t certain what it was. “The peas sure tasted
good.”
She clasped her pocketbook. “Did they?”
This was what he meant about the pattern of their
dealings, the skittish back-and-forth. She was either doubting him or
fishing for a compliment, but he couldn’t tell. What he wanted,
what was needed was clean, straight, simple talk.
“Can’t you take me at my word?”
Her eyes watered and she blinked. “I’ll
bring you something else next time. What do you think you’d like?”
“Look,” he raised his voice to make it
stick, “the peas are fine. I’ll eat them until they’re
gone. One by one if that’ll prove to you I like them.”
She didn’t even pretend to be bewildered by
his outburst.
He wanted to back up and try again. Say what he meant
to say. That he was grateful she’d come all this way to tend him.
That he was sorry he had acted like a jack mule.
She gave the table a last swipe, straightened the
shoes and tucked his socks inside. Sometimes at the end of a visit, she
said, “I love you, Dad,” and he would have to look away,
or pretend he hadn’t heard, or if she put him on the spot, he’d
have to mumble “You too,” or some such. He wanted her to
say it now, so he could say it back and mean it. “Well,” he
dropped the word into the silence to give her time, but when nothing
came of it, he finished with, “you’ll have a long drive home.”
“I don’t mind. It gives me time to think.”
Her answer went contrariwise to his intention, but
she was trying to be gracious and so he let it ride. He walked her to
the porch and down the steps, stood by while she loaded up. When she
swung into the driver’s seat and shut the door, he wondered why
although the day hadn’t gone the way he planned, he felt so oddly
gleeful. It wasn’t just his shriven feet or that they’d dealt
with one another to the metes and bounds of their imperfect powers or
that the fire he’d felt to say his piece had come to smoke. Something
else had left him.
His faith stood fast—from the steps he’d
looked into the cloudless sky to test it and found God as ever in His
heaven—but it came to him there was no need to square himself and
no undoing in a lesson what had been laid down in a lifetime. There was
no coming clean, not now or ever. If this meant that when the roll was
called up yonder he would not be there, it would have to be—it was—all
right, but if there was a place for those who wanted to be better than
they knew they were, he’d hope for that. Or maybe he should just
relax and go to hell. In either place, he reckoned, there’d be
kin to spare.
He felt—although the urge to foolery made him
wonder if his wits had left him—like acting up, and a reckless
feeling in his bones moved him to try a tent-show buck-and-wing. He jutted
his elbows, executed a step that came off as a jerky, sideways hop. He
looked to see if she would smile.
She started the engine, her near arm elbowed out
the open window. “You’re all right, Dad?”
He made a show of patting himself down—chest
to belly to hip pockets—and mugging his amazement. “Seem
to be.”
One laugh, not given out of duty but sincerely, would
be sign enough for him to hear what he least deserved but most needed
to hear, and when it came it was more a puff pressed through her lips
that made a little air-leak sound, but it was so genuine that if it had
been a coin it wouldn’t dent.
When he reached out to pat her arm, sunlight glinted
off the sideview mirror—an unkind glare that if it were in his
sway to do so he would soften—to cast a square of light across
her eyes, her brows raised in unguarded startle at his touch. “Well,
then,” she said. She shifted into gear and headed down the lane.
She always made a point of looking back as she turned
onto the road, and just before her last view of the old man he knew she
saw as he stood barefoot in the yard of a makeshift place on stopgap
land, a word he should have said came to him, a word so sentimental that
his vision clouded and he knew and didn’t care that he wasn’t
long for this or any world, a blessing that he prayed would stay with
him and follow her like mercy, like his better ghost, and he willed it
to her understanding, Godspeed.
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